3.8 Article

Seeing double: design and enactments of a lesson on perspective-taking

Journal

CURRICULUM JOURNAL
Volume 29, Issue 2, Pages 277-294

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09585176.2018.1445578

Keywords

Curriculum making; sociomaterial; social topology; narrative inquiry; empathy; assessment

Funding

  1. Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)

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This narrative inquiry of a lesson intended to develop perspective-taking links our understanding of teachers as curriculum makers with a sociomaterial attunement to the ways that materials, forms, and time are also actors in producing curriculum. We offer a close reading of three classroom enactments of the same lesson and discuss ways that these instances of curriculum-making expanded or diminished opportunities for elementary pupils to communicate shifts in perspective through personal narrative writing. We find temporal, spatial, and material resources, including schedules, technologies, and forms of assessment, to play key roles in shaping relations in curriculum making.

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